breath.
âHoly shit!â Okay. He was flappable. He was flapped. He was what-the-hell-ever, but no way was she going out in public like that.
âIs that a common greeting among your people?â Marie asked, raising her chin and smiling. But underneath the smile was a hint of something else. Hurt, maybe. Nervousness.
âDamn. I mean, no, that is not a common greeting. Iâm sorry, you just knocked me a little off balance,â he admitted. Then he stepped forward, forcing her to let him enter the cabin. He closed the door behind him and took another step toward her.
The polite thing would have been to maintain a courteous distance.
When she put that dress on, she should have known heâd have no chance at polite.
He deliberately dropped his gaze from her face and scanned her luscious curves in the silky dark blue dress. The neckline dropped low in some kind of draped fold, and the rest of it wrapped her waist and hugged her breasts and hips like it had been sewn aroundher body. The swing of the skirt caressed her legs just above her knees, and he wanted nothing more than to drop to his own knees before her, push the fall of fabric slowly up those silken thighs, and discover what exactly she was wearing underneath.
He lifted his head and stared down into her eyes. âDid you wear that for me?â he said, almost not recognizing the raspy words as his own voice.
The brave smile trembled on her lips, and she began to answer, then abruptly turned away from him and walked toward the kitchen. But the view from behind was just as sexy, and he had to shift his legs as he hardened painfully inside his pants. Waves of dark silken hair tumbled down over her shoulders and back, brushing against her rounded hips. The vision heâd had earlier of her hair spread over his bed came back to him in full force, and he had to remind himself to breathe.
She stopped on the other side of the table, as if using the furniture as a barricade between them. âIt was simply a dress I brought to wear for dining,â she said. âIs it inappropriate?â Sheâd uttered the words in a tone of bored indifference, but the rapid pulse of her heart told him it was an act.
âYou canât lie to a shape-shifter, darlinâ,â he said, putting a little southern drawl in the words. âI can hear your heartbeat. If you want to play games with me, Iâm all for it. But be advised that Iâm alpha for more reasons than physical strength. Are you sure youâre up to playing games with me?â
Heâd moved closer to her as he talked, stalking her. His cat had the scent of prey in its nostrils. No. Not prey. Something more primal. More visceral.
Mate.
Ethan stopped midstride as the realization came to him. His cat wanted to lay mate claim to this woman. This Atlantean who was not even a shape-shifter.
No.
Hell no.
âNo, I am not sure that I am up for your idea of games,â Marie said. âIf you prefer, we can cancel our dinner plans, although Iâm sure it would have beenâ¦pleasantâ¦to spend time with you. But if the idea distresses youâ¦â She shrugged. âFar be it from me to cause distress to the alpha of your pride, as you so continually remind me you are.â
He weighed and discarded responses and finally settled on the simplest. âDo you have any idea how beautiful you are?â
It was her turn to be caught off guard. He watched, entranced, as rich, rosy color swept up her neck to her cheeks and burned there. She tilted her head and examined the wood grain of the table, which was evidently fascinating. âIâ¦No, youâ¦Thank you. That is very kind of you.â
âNo. Itâs not,â he said flatly. âItâs not kind at all. Itâs the truth, and Iâm just wondering how many fights Iâm going to get in if I take you out in public wearing that dress. You look like a manâs hottest fantasy come to
Yvette Hines, Monique Lamont